Mad Capital launched its Perennial Fund II (PFII) to provide farmers in the United States with tailored loans that help them transition to regenerative organic farmland while also increasing farmer profits. PFII, which is targeting $50 million, has received early commitments from Builders Vision, The Rockefeller Foundation, the Schmidt Family Foundation, Zellis Family Foundation, Zarpet Family Foundation, Matthew Zell Family Foundation, Lacebark Investments, and nine other investors. Building on the success of Mad Capital’s portfolio of funds supporting regenerative organic agriculture, the PFII aims to bring Mad Capital’s total financing to over 150,000 acres of farmland and partnerships with more than 50 farming families.
“We are aiming to build a bridge between two distant worlds that need one another to transition our food system – Wall Street and organic farmers,” said Brandon Welch, co-founder and CEO at Mad Capital. “Providing farmers with access to capital gives humanity a shot at producing an abundance of healthy food while being ecologically accountable to our working lands and those that steward them.”
Agriculture is one of the leading drivers of climate change, and extractive farming practices are causing biodiversity loss and healthy soil. Regenerative organic farmers reverse this damage by working with nature, not against it, creating economically and ecologically resilient food systems. PFII — Mad Capital’s second private credit fund — will provide regenerative organic farmers in the US with tailored loans to cover the full array of capital needs so they can transition to organic, invest in soil health, develop new markets, and diversify their enterprise.
“Mad Capital is playing an integral role in the transition to regenerative organic agriculture. Through their innovative and holistic approach, they are providing capital to farmers who have been overlooked and underserved by traditional capital markets, while their broader platform also offers technical assistance, market access, and a sense of community,” said Sara Balawajder, Director, Investments at Builder’s Vision. “We’re excited about Perennial Fund II and its potential to de-risk this space and open up capital market access more widely to farmers looking to transition their practices.”